George Shultz, former secretary of state, dead at age 100

Shultz, who was one of only two Americans to have held four different federal Cabinet-level positions throughout his long career, is best known for leading the State Department under Reagan. He also served as secretary of the Department of Treasury, secretary of the Department of Labor and director of the Office of Management and Budget during President Richard Nixon’s administration.
His work in presidential administrations extended back to President Dwight D. Eisenhower, when Shultz worked as a senior staff economist on his Council of Economic Advisers during the 1950s.
“Our colleague was a great American statesman and a true patriot in every sense of the word. He will be remembered in history as a man who made the world a better place,” former Secretary of State and Director of the Hoover Institution Condoleezza Rice said in a statement.
Shultz, who was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1989, had been working as a Thomas W. and Susan B. Ford Distinguished Fellow at the Hoover Institution before his death, according to the statement, which said he worked at “Stanford nearly every day until his passing.”
He died at home in California. The cause of death was not given.
President Joe Biden hailed Shultz as a “gentleman of honor and ideas” in a statement Sunday evening.
“I regret that, as president, I will not be able to benefit from his wisdom, as have so many of my predecessors,” Biden said.
“And, while he and I sometimes argued the opposite sides of issues when I was a young senator, I was proud to often find common ground on issues vital to the security and prosperity of the American people,” the President added.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Shultz a “legend” and a “visionary” in a statement remembering him Sunday, noting that he “urged serious action on the climate crisis at a time when too few leaders took that position.”
“Every Secretary of State who came after George Shultz has studied him — his work, his judgment, his intellect. I know I have,” Blinken added.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom remembered Shultz as “an extraordinary statesman, public servant and friend” who “significantly shaped America’s foreign policy and worked for change at home, too.”
“Our state is fortunate that Secretary Shultz headed west later in his career, bringing his wisdom and insight to advising Governor (Arnold) Schwarzenegger, roles at the Hoover Institution and more,” Newsom said in a statement.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a longtime friend of Shultz’s, said in a statement Sunday that with his passing, “the world has lost a revered statesman and brilliant public servant.” The late secretary, she said, had “dedicated his life to promoting a more peaceful and secure future.”
The department said his “positive responses to the overtures of Gorbachev and his Foreign Minister, Eduard Shevardnadze, and through his own initiatives, Shultz helped to draft and sign landmark arms control treaties and other agreements that helped to diminish US-Soviet antagonism.”
During his time as secretary, Shultz was especially concerned with the global threat of nuclear weapons, according to the Hoover Institution, which said the diplomat once told Stanford students that “in an age of nuclear weapons, maintaining collective security is no easy task.”
“We must both defend freedom and preserve peace. We must seek to advance those moral values to which this nation and its allies are deeply committed. And we must do so in a nuclear age in which a global war would thoroughly destroy those values,” he said.
Shultz also took on challenges in the Middle East, having brokered an agreement between Israel and Lebanon in which Israel agreed to start withdrawing troops, according to his State Department biography, which noted the late diplomat was, however, “unable to forge a lasting resolution to the Middle East conflict.”
“We are not making any endorsement in the current presidential election,” they wrote in a joint statement. “We are dedicated to fostering a bipartisan foreign policy and we will devote ourselves to this effort now and after the election.”
“This is as close as big business gets to a consensus position,” the op-ed read, arguing that “our companies are best served by a stable and predictable international framework that commits all nations to climate-change mitigation.”
This story has been updated with additional details.